Spokesman Father Federico Lombardi indicated that the report is part of its obligation to the U.N. Convention Against Torture treaty.

CNA/EWTN NEWS

VATICAN CITY — The Holy See's press officer said Tuesday that its report on an anti-torture agreement that will be made to the United Nations next month is part of its obligation as a signatory to the treaty

“It is a standard procedure adhered to by all states party to the convention” against torture, Father Federico Lombardi said April 15. “Considering the types of obligations included in the convention, the Holy See signed the convention in 2002 exclusively in the name of and on the part of Vatican city state.

“For this reason, the Holy See continues to fulfill its obligations on the part of Vatican city state and to present periodical reports, in accordance with the procedures set forth in the convention.”

The Holy See will submit its report this May, along with the states of Cyprus, Lithuania, Guinea, Montenegro, Sierra Leone, Thailand and Uruguay.

Each of the 155 states, which are parties to the U.N. Convention Against Torture — including the United States — are obliged to report to the international organization's Committee Against Torture every four years about its implementation.

The Center for Constitutional Rights, a legal group that represents SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), meanwhile, said April 14 that the Vatican had been “summoned” to report about sexual abuse and cover-ups in the Catholic Church to the U.N. committee.

The center contends that failures in the Holy See’s response to sexual abuse constitutes a violation of the convention.

Publicity Stunt

The Center for Constitutional Rights had earlier asked that the International Criminal Court prosecute Benedict XVI and other Church leaders, alleging they had direct responsibility for sexual violence and crimes against humanity.

Critics saw the move as a publicity stunt that undermined human-rights law and was based in a misunderstanding of how oversight works in the Church, where local bishops and religious orders are primarily responsible for the actions of clergy.

The International Criminal Court dismissed the center’s investigation request in June 2013 on the grounds that it did not fall within the court’s jurisdiction.

In January 2014, the U.N. committee that oversees the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child controversially criticized both the Church’s handling of sex abuse and Catholic moral teaching. The Committee on the Rights of the Child’s report claimed that the Vatican had “systematically” adopted policies that allowed priests to rape and molest children.

Catholic leaders, including Father Lombardi and the archbishop leading the Holy See’s permanent observer mission to the U.N., said the report showed a “serious” lack of understanding of the Holy See and the steps it has taken to root out clerical sex abuse.

That report also criticized the Church’s teachings on contraception, abortion and same-sex “marriage,” suggesting that the Church change its teaching to support these “rights.”

Austin Ruse, president of C-FAM (the Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute), said, “This committee is telling a religion to change its teaching. That is the most outrageous thing that this committee has ever done.”

Asked Forgiveness

Pope Francis on April 11 asked forgiveness for priests who sexually abused children. He said the Church’s response to sex abuse has to be “even stronger.”

The Pope has also affirmed the Church’s efforts to combat abuse.

In a March 5 interview with the Italian daily newspaper Corriere della Sera, he denounced cases of abuse by clergy as “terrible” and acknowledged the “extremely deep wounds” abuse can cause.

“The Church has done so much on this path. Perhaps more than anyone,” Pope Francis said. “The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution to have acted with transparency and responsibility. No other has done more. And the Church is the only one to be attacked.”

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